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Global Warning
Do Unto Others
Europe and the Issue of Rest
The Black-Robed Regiment
Questions of Liberty
Free Will, Predestination, and Religious Liberty
The Christian Persecutory Impulse
Lawful, But Not Helpful
A Mosque Too Close?
Integral History
The Fate of the Co-joined Twins
The Medieval Not Quite Reformed
The Rest of the Story
Red Sunday in Washington
The Right Thing
The Awakening
Beware When All Speak Well of You
4/18/13 Liberty Magazine | Integral History
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Integral HistoryEditorial
BY: LINCOLN E. STEED
ot the catchiest of titles, but I use it for a reason.
The historian Will Durant spent nearly 50 years
writing The Story of Civilization. It put him in the company
of such ambitious personal historians as Edward
Gibbon and Winston Churchill. Like Churchill, Durant
was able to stamp history with a well-reasoned, narrative
style. Unlike Gibbon, who at times showed an
antagonism to religion, Durant saw it as one of the major
forces in history—and he was able to appreciate the best of the religious impulse. His method he called "integral history." For him,
no force (such as religion), no person, no country, could be understood apart from the full context of history. He looked at the entire
fabric of human events.
Of late it seems that the very fabric of world civilization is at the ripping point. Of late it seems that religion is out of control. Of late it
seems that the structures of commerce and investment, so long taken for granted, are about to pancake down into mayhem. We
don't hear as much from futurists as we used to; and there is a startlingly flat-earth mentality in the fulminations of those who would
go back to a mythical past.
Only two decades on from Francis Fukuyama's The End of History and the Last Man we know that his view of finished social
development was naive. We seem loath to accept fully Samuel Huntington's premise in The Clash of Civilizations that "the fault
lines between civilizations will be the battle lines of the future." Of course much of his premise is somewhat self-evident. Where
many fear to go is his rather detailed analysis of the obvious and worsening conflict between Islam and Christianity. It is too
unthinkably an existential conflict for most to even acknowledge.
Huntington looked at some of the factors leading to conflict between Christianity and Islam. Both are missionary religions that seek
to grow by conversion. Both believe that only their faith is the correct one. And both hold that their values and beliefs relate to the
purpose of human existence. Generally these points are valid—and have been so for centuries, of course.
Yes, I think it only too obvious that behind the "war on terrorism," behind the religious violence in both the Middle East and the
middle West, is a historic retesting of faith communities.
And in some ways most of the world is in the process of regrouping into faith communities. The old isms and ideologies are
passing into denatured irrelevance. Imperialism passed on early in the twentieth century. Communism essentially expired as the
century came to an end. Democracy has had superficial success, but shown itself incapable of resisting popular mandates for
extremism and despotism. Pure capitalism is not held in high esteem, especially after September 2008, and exists most strongly
in hybridized forms like that found in China. Nationalism in the West has declined since World War II; died in the Middle East with
Nasser; and lives on elsewhere in the rump form of North Korea and Myanmar. What we are left with is a rapidly coalescing world
clumping of peoples defined by common "tribe" or religion markers. That does not bode well for religious harmony, but it is not
quite the clash of civilizations. In some ways it is rather the redefining of civilizations.
Given that religion is more and more a default setting, we need to keep it in mind. We cannot presume to wage a war on terrorism
and pretend that we are dealing with a few bad apples and that religion generally is not at play here. We cannot imagine that
extremist stirrings in the desert of the Middle East are somehow a different thing than Christian militias organizing to take back
America. And on the plus side, we should know that spiritual revitalization in Latin America and Africa is empowering people to live
more humane lives, cope with the rapid changes of the twenty-first century, and build toward community.
In short, we need to see current trends and religious development in particular within the matrix of "integral developments" (to
borrow from Will Durant). There are a myriad powerful forces working to push our world on to change and crisis—a myriad
interconnecting tendrils of "future shock." We need to recognize that many of them are working in synchronicity.
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We in the religious liberty field know that there have been innumerable moments of testing in the past. In fact, there are constant
legal tests to even the most settled legal assumptions underlying our liberties. It is not lightly said that eternal vigilance is the price
of liberty. However, in the present global flux, religious liberty threats can approach quite near under cover of another issue entirely
until it is almost too late.
Europe is wrestling with the demographic shock of mass people movements. This invokes a tribal defense. But many of the
newcomers have a different faith as well, and aggressive religious intolerance breaks out on both fronts.
The Middle East is stirred by political aggression and an unwelcome modernity that seems to threaten the very cultural identity of
the peoples in the region. It is no accident that the jihad from an age of religious expansion by the sword appeals to this cultural
frustration. Religious self-determinism itself is threatened and internal religious feuds reignited.
The United States is itself suffering severe religious angst. There is an admirable attempt to maintain the constitutional mandate of
religious freedom for all and a separation of church and state, or at least government neutrality toward religious powers. But that is
hard to maintain on every front. Protestant America too easily sidles up to the church-state power that is the Vatican in a fight
against the secularism that troubles all true believers—especially those who cherish the misconception that the United States was
founded as some sort of religious colony. The net effect of this is a sea-change of thinking among people of faith toward any
separation of church and state. And each public debate over things such as mosques in Nashville or prayer in schools or right to
life only accelerates the move toward a religious formulation of what it means to be a true American. It may ultimately mean the
repudiation of all the constitutional protections of religion other than those defined as "American." It does not at all seem
legislatively imminent, but the "integral development" of events worldwide argues that it might be unless we specifically guard
against it.
In the preface to Volume VI of his history entitled The Reformation, Will Durant wrote, "We begin by considering religion in general,
its functions in the soul and the group and the conditions and problems of the Roman Catholic Church in the two centuries before
Luther. . . . And, as we proceed, we shall note how social revolution, with communistic aspirations, marched hand-in-hand with
religious revolt. We shall weakly echo Gibbon's chapter on the fall of Constantinople and shall perceive how the advance of the
Turks to the gates of Vienna made it possible for one man to defy at once an emperor and a pope. We shall consider
sympathetically the efforts of Erasmus for the peaceful self-return of the church. We shall study Germany on the eve of Luther and
may thereby come to understand how inevitable he was when he came."
History has patterns, even if they do not exactly replicate. We are facing a similar dynamic, and may see a similar inevitability to sea
changes in attitudes toward religious freedom—even in a land in which it has been enshrined in culture and law.
Lincoln E. Steed is editor of Liberty magazine.
4/18/13 Liberty Magazine | A Mosque Too Close?
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A Mosque TooClose?
BY: REUEL S. AM DUR
he controversy over the so-called Ground Zero
mosque in New York City in some ways
demonstrates a failure of leadership. But before we
identify those failures, let us review the situation more
broadly.
Muslims are currently worshipping at a building that
formerly housed a coat manufacturer. The facility is a couple of long blocks away from the actual Ground Zero—the site of the World
Trade Center, which was destroyed on September 11, 2001. The imam who leads the worship, Feisal Abdul Rauf, plans to build
an Islamic community center to replace the old facility. The center, patterned after a Jewish community center, is to contain a prayer
area along with various other facilities and meeting rooms, and will be open to Muslims and non-Muslims alike. The plan is that it
will have an interfaith board of directors.
Imam Rauf is a Sufi. Sufism is a long-established tendency in Islam that is liberal in its outlook. One of the severe challenges
Islam and the Islamic world faces is its encounter with modernity. In Muslim belief, the Koran was dictated to Muhammad by the
angel Gabriel, so everything in the Koran is seen as literally true. The Sufis, however, claim that there are hidden meanings, giving
them a degree of flexibility.
Rauf relies both on flexibility and on specific Koranic demands for tolerance. "Your religion for you and mine for me," says one
passage. Another declares that Allah made different peoples on the earth so that they would know one another. Rauf has
dedicated himself to promoting tolerance, mutual respect, and cooperation among religious communities. As well, he promotes
the United States as a freedom-loving country that is worthy of appreciation. As I write this he is currently touring the Middle East,
sponsored by the State Department, to deliver that message.
What exactly is the neighborhood that surrounds the proposed site? Some critics at a distance, still hurting from the shock of 9/11,
call it part of "holy ground." The reality of this area some blocks from the actual site of the long-gone towers is a little more prosaic.
There is a store selling knitting yarn, a delicatessen, and a bookshop specializing in mysteries. However, there is also a seedier
side: an off-track betting outlet, strip clubs, bars, and an "exotic" lingerie shop.
The stated reasons for opposition to what has been pejoratively termed the Ground Zero mosque vary from the "respectable" to the
openly hostile. The "respectable" opposition holds that constructing the Islamic facility so close to the site of the World Trade
Center would be insensitive to the relatives of those who lost their lives in that tragedy. After all, they say, not quite accurately
characterizing the political as well as religious goals of al-Qaeda, the destruction was done in the name of Islam. These
"respectable" opponents would add that they have nothing against Muslims. It is just that the location is too "controversial."
Muslims have the right to build there, but couldn't they find another location?
Other opponents are more extreme; for instance, the woman who showed up at the New York City Landmarks Preservation
Commission with her placard reading "Don't glorify murders of 3,000. No 9/11 victory mosque." Despite the objections the
commission voted that the site of the old factory is not a historical landmark in need of preservation. Zoning regulations have been
satisfied, and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act seems vindicated. New York City mayor Michael
Bloomberg and President Obama both correctly cited a tradition of religious freedom and a separation of church and state in
defense of the right of any group to act on such plans.
A more extensive example of the extremist vitriol that has been poured out on this issue is found on the Bad Eagle blog, in an
article headed "The Bloomberg Mosque," referring to Mayor Bloomberg. Says the blogger, "New York City's mayor, Michael
Bloomberg, supports the Ground Zero Mosque, the hideous monument to Muslim terror, apparently because of his business ties
to the Muslim world." Then, referring to a talk show host, he adds: "Michael Savage says this is the explanation for Bloomberg's
pro-terrorist Muslim position. All Bloomberg's rhetoric about religious freedom, American core values, etc., is all insincere, all
superfluous, all very dangerous. And it all is a façade for his financial quests." This surely is not just misrepresentation but a type of
hate speech.
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Then there are those who straddle the line between the "genteel" and the gross. Rick Tyler, a spokesman for Newt Gingrich,
exemplified this approach in a reply to an article in the Economist. Yes, Gingrich "recognizes the difference between moderate
Muslims and radical Islamists and that the guilt of the 9/11 terrorists does not fall on all Muslims." However, while some radical
Islamists use terror, "other radical Islamists also use non-violent methods to wage a cultural, economic, political, and legal jihad
that seeks the same totalitarian goal of sharia supremacy even while claiming to repudiate violence." The innuendo is that Rauf is
one of the latter group.
After all, didn't Rauf once say that "United States policies were an accessory" to 9/11? Indeed he did. But he said more than that. He
said that the United States enabled al-Qaeda to perpetrate 9/11 because America once gave aid to Osama bin Laden. That charge
would not seem to make him a "radical Islamist" or any kind of sympathizer with those who carried out the attack on the World
Trade Center.
The opposition to the Islamic center, expressed in "genteel" terms, gives a cloak of legitimacy to the more extreme bigotry.
Opposition to the site was even taken up by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) on the basis that, while Rauf and his associates
have the right to build at the proposed site, it would not be right (correct) for them to exercise that right because of the sensitivities of
the families of victims of 9/11. It is a sad reality that a number of the victims on 9/11 were Muslims, and the families of the victims
find themselves on both sides of the issue.
The ADL has historically been a leading civil rights-civil liberties organization, engaged in advocacy, research, and interfaith
activities. Paradoxically, it has in the past cooperated with Rauf in promoting Jewish-Muslim dialogue. With its background in the
field of intergroup relations, it should have been aware of the opening that the position it took gave to people of ill will, both the
"genteel" opponents of Muslims and the more openly bigoted.
Because of the stance it took, I believe the ADL made it respectable for anti-Muslim bigots to make their case, from the most
genteel to the far less genteel. However, the ADL did face a barrage of criticism from within the Jewish community. One ADL board
member, Tom Goldblatt, spoke out against the position of his organization. Other rabbis, including David Ellenson, president of
Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, also spoke out against the position.
A number of Christian leaders lined up in defense of the proposed Islamic center, including the president and the general
secretary of the National Council of Churches and Jerry Campbell, president of Claremont Theological Seminary.
Faced with the vigorous opposition to the ADL position, especially in the Jewish community, Abe Foxman, the executive director,
finally announced that his organization would not pursue the matter further. However, damage had already been done.
Islamophobia—indeed generally antireligious views—had been encouraged. A pastor of a minuscule church in Florida took it upon
himself to announce a Koran burning and further polarized opinion. A once-leading human rights organization based in the Jewish
community had provided a cover for prejudice.
In a meeting with a group of Muslim Democrats, President Obama declared, "I believe that Muslims have the same right to practice
their religion as anyone else in this country. That includes the right to build a place of worship and a community center on private
property in lower Manhattan, in accordance with local laws and ordinances." What could be clearer? But shortly after, he got cold
feet. Yes, he said, they have the right to build the center there, but he would not comment on the "wisdom" of the choice of location.
One could almost hear the sigh of relief from the opponents of the center. Sometimes it is better not to elaborate too much.
A recent Pew Research Center poll found that just over half of the respondents opposed building the center at the proposed site.
However, 62 percent held that Muslims should have equal rights to build their houses of worship. What these mixed results tell us
is that what is needed is forceful leadership in defense of religious freedom in this case. A number of politicians, especially
Republicans, have made the location of the center a major electoral issue. Perhaps it is time for President Obama to use his
presidency as a bully pulpit in defense of religious freedom for all. Mayor Bloomberg issued a spirited defense of the site for the
Muslim center, invoking the history of religious discrimination in New York. We need more public figures to step up and defend
religious freedom.
Appearing before the media, Bloomberg, who is Jewish, was accompanied by Jewish and other religious leaders; a reminder that
the larger Jewish community knows how important the defense of religious rights is for all. With heartfelt emotion, he declared,
"This nation was founded on the principle that the government must never choose between religions or favor one over another. The
World Trade Center site will forever hold a special place in our city, in our hearts. But we would be untrue to the best part of
ourselves and who we are as New Yorkers and Americans if we said no to a mosque in lower Manhattan."
With reference to the events of September 11,
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he observed that "thousands of first
responders heroically rushed to the scene
and saved tens of thousands of lives. More
than 400 of those first responders did not
make it out alive. In rushing into those burning
buildings, not one of them asked, 'What God
do you pray to?' 'What beliefs do you hold?'"
As for Muslims, he urged that they "are as
much a part of our city and our country as the
people of any faith. And they are as welcome
to worship in lower Manhattan as any other
group. In fact, they have been worshipping at
the site for the better part of a year, as is their
right."
He ended his remarks with this flourish:
"Political controversies come and go, but our
values and our traditions endure, and there is
no neighborhood in this city that is off-limits to
God's love and mercy, as the religious
leaders here with us can attest."
At this writing, it is not clear if the Muslim
center will go ahead with construction at the
site. Yet, if they yield to pressure and move to
another location there is no guarantee that
they will be welcomed with open arms.
Currently, opposition to building local
mosques has arisen in Temecula, California;
Murfreesboro, Tennessee; and Florence,
Kentucky.
In Temecula a group apparently related to the
Tea Party movement arranged a demonstration outside the local Islamic center because of the center's plan to build on a new
location. They urged people to bring dogs to the demonstration because dogs are considered by Muslims to be unclean. This is
not a polite objection.
Remember the woman with the sign at the meeting of the Landmarks Preservation Commission? It is becoming clearer that
unless people of good will everywhere restate persuasively the logic and the laws of religious freedom, she and her kind will not
welcome a mosque or Islamic community center anywhere.
Reuel S. Amdur writes from Val-des-Monts, Quebec, Canada.
4/18/13 Liberty Magazine | Lawful, But Not Helpful
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Lawful, But NotHelpful: On TheKoran BurningThat (Thank God)Never HappenedOpinion
BY: CLIFFORD GOLDSTEIN
s of this writing anyway—though the so-called “Ground Zero” mosque controversy is still unresolved—at least the Gainesville,
Florida, pastor who threatened to burn the Koran as a public protest against the mosque has backed off.
No Koran burnings by Christian clergy, at least for now.
However much as many Americans could understand his frustration, and anger, most no doubt breathed a sigh of relief with the
announced cancellation of the “International Burn a Koran Day.”
If a few cartoons in a Scandinavian newspaper could lead to violence, one doesn’t need to be a prophet of any religion in order to
imagine the outrage that an in-your-face Koran burning would have sparked among Muslims. It already had started protests in
Afghanistan, where thousands of United States and other NATO troops are located. No wonder that before the pastor finally
relented, everyone from Barack Obama to Hillary Clinton to General David Petraeus—not to mention religious leaders from around
the world—condemned the proposed action. With tensions running high, the last thing anyone needed, or wanted, was this (with
maybe the exception of the jihadists, who would have surely found many more disaffected and outraged young men willing to blow
themselves up in response).
It all started when Pastor Terry Jones, senior pastor of the tiny 50-member Dove World Outreach Center in Gainesville, Florida,
announced plans to burn Islamic holy books on Saturday, September 11, 2010, in order to commemorate the terror attacks. Mostly,
though, the scheduled book burning was an emotional response to the idea of a mosque—or more accurately an Islamic
community center—near the Ground Zero site of the attack.
In a macabre kind of way, both the mosque controversy and the canceled “International Burn a Koran Day” are representations of
the clash of rights that a liberal democracy such as the United States—with a strong focus on freedom of religion and free speech
—is bound to face.
No doubt, however offensive the mosque might be to some Americans, just as the Koran burning would be, both are legal. Though
we don’t have a tradition in America of burning books, our free society allows for it, just as it allows for the building of mosques.
Things that cause offense to others are not deemed illegal merely because they cause offense to others. There’s no right not to be
offended in the Constitution (not that such an omission has stopped the courts from finding rights in there that weren’t written down
in the document, but that’s another matter completely). Our political and religious freedom would mean nothing if they were
curtailed because others found them offensive. People burn American flags on our streets; others carry swastikas down them.
Offensive, yes; illegal, no.
In the case of the Koran burning and Ground Zero mosque, the words from the apostle Paul might be worthy of some
consideration. Paul wrote to the Corinthians: “All things are lawful for me, but not all things are helpful; all things are lawful for me,
but not all things edify” (1 Corinthians 10:23, NKJV).*
However lawful either action would be, neither is particularly helpful. Though some might bristle at the idea of equating the building
a house of worship with burning some other faith’s holy book, the point is still the same: our free society allows for both.
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We just need to be prepared to live with the consequences of our freedoms. They could lead to actions
that might be lawful, but not helpful. And, considering the tensions in the world right now, we need all
the help we can get.
Clifford Goldstein writes from Sykesville, Maryland.
*From the New King James Version. Copyright 1979, 1980, 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rightsreserved.
4/18/13 Liberty Magazine | The Christian Persecutory Impulse
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The ChristianPersecutoryImpulsePart One In A Series
BY: DAV ID J.B. TRIM
here are many different forms of relgious
intolernace, and, over the centuries, many faiths
have persecuted. In the Western context, however, it is
the persecution of Christians, by Christians, especially in
the two centuries after the Reformation, that is most important, because it still shapes relationships between peoples of different
faiths and confessions today. Yet it is also often misunderstood. This is the first in a series of articles that will explore the history of
Christian persecution. I will show in this article that Christians first began to persecute in the late Roman Empire. However, the
emergence of a persecutory mentality was not an imposition of emperors, eager to use the church’s moral authority for secular
ends. Instead, it emerged out of the fervor of Christians to combat error and to spread truth.
It is vital to recognize that even though the early church rejected violence, the persecutory impulse has been present in Christianity
from an early time. This does not mean that Christianity inevitably is persecutory, but it does mean it is important to understand why
Christians began to persecute and why they—eventually—embraced first religious toleration and then the grander concept of
religious freedom. There are lessons to be learned about our own impulse to persecute in the twenty-first century.
Constantine’s Sword
t is often alleged that persecution by Christians began with the conversion to Christianity of Roman emperors: especially
Constantine I, “the Great” (c. 306–337). This view was expressed by some of the earliest proponents of religious liberty,
including Roger Williams, the celebrated early-seventeenth-century advocate of toleration (who will be considered further later in
this series). Williams argued that it was under Constantine that the church first made the fatal misstep of trying to impose personal
beliefs by the sword. Constantine’s “unknowing zeal” did more damage to the church, he averred, than “the raging fury of the most
bloody Neroes,” for Constantine made “the Garden of the Church, and the Field of the World to be all one” when by nature they
ought to be distinct. Accordingly, Williams concluded, in order for the ecclesial “Garden” to be restored to an Edenic ideal, it was
essential (as a recent biographer puts it) first to “undo what Constantine, 1, 300 years before, had done.”1
Williams was not unique in this view and it did not die with him. It persists to this day: several popular twenty-first-century books
have endorsed the claim that Constantine’s reign witnessed the introduction of a new paradigm in relationships between the
Christian church, the state, and other religions.2 Constantine, it is claimed, effectively “commandeer[ed] Christianity to bolster his
ambitions for the empire,” with the result that orthodoxy and heresy became “essentially a matter of power politics.”3
Constantine and Freedom of Conscience
he reality is that Constantine himself opposed persecution. Although he personally converted to Christianity, changed the empire’s
official religion to Christianity, and played a significant role in the theological controversies that characterized and polarized the early
church, he was opposed to sanctions against those who did not convert.
Immediately on succeeding to the imperial throne in the Western Roman Empire, in 306, he “unilaterally ended all persecution in
his territories, even providing for restitution” to Christians for churches that had been destroyed.4 This, though, only halted
persecution; it did not actually legalize Christianity.
After Constantine’s victory over Maxentius, a rival claimant to the throne, at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge (A.D. 312), which
Constantine believed he had won by the power of “the God of the Christians,” he wanted to go further. He was initially coemperor
with Licinius, who ruled in the Eastern Empire and was a devotee of the sun god. But at a meeting at Milan, in A.D. 313,
Constantine persuaded his colleague to issue a joint public declaration, providing that “anyone who chooses to observe the
Christian religion may do so freely and openly without being molested.”
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An illustration from a northern Italian compendium of
canon law depicts Constantine I, the
Council of Nicea, and the condemnation and
burning of Arian books.
However, while the emperors granted “free and unconditional exercise”
of the Christian religion, they also explicitly accorded “the same open
and free observance” of belief and worship to followers of “other religions.”5
There is no doubt that, despite being issued in the name of both emperors,
the declaration reflected Constantine’s concerns. What is striking is that
these included, in the religious sphere, replacing enforced conformity with
individual choice. “Christians and all others” were to have an “unrestricted
ability to follow whichever religion each of them chose.”6 Constantine’s
willingness to allow the people of the empire the freedom to choose was
unusual, because “both Roman emperors and their subjects assumed it to
be both a right and a duty of emperors to ensure proper worship of divinity.”7
But the imperial declaration explains the new policy, avowing that one of the
most important matters “pertaining to the general welfare and security” of the
empire and “the good of mankind in general” was “the reverence of divinity”;8
the freedom of choice was conceded to all the emperors’ subjects so that
“whatever divinity is seated in heaven might be gracious and propitious to us
and to all under our rule.”9
In other words, Constantine was asserting that freedom to believe is not
merely a prudent choice for a state that has a significant religious minority; it
is in accordance with the will of the Almighty. The declaration reiterates the
presumption “that the supreme deity” would “accord to all his accustomed
favor and benevolence” only if “no one whatsoever should be denied the
freedom to give his heart to Christian observance, or whatever religion in his
own mind he thinks best.”10 This is one of the most important arguments for
religious liberty, for it is itself based on religion, rather than irreligion; all
faiths have produced holy men and women who have taught that, in realizing
religious freedom, we are honoring the divine. The 313 declaration gives
precedence in the text to Christianity, which reflects Constantine’s own priorities, for Christianity was the faith he himself now
professed. Yet the declaration also made clear that all people should be able to think through what religion seemed most
attractive, and then choose for themselves, and that it was this personal choice, based on individual conscience, that would
determine how a person worshipped—not the emperor’s decision.
Constantine and Toleration
lmost 10 years later Licinius and Constantine went to war for sole control of the empire. The former attacked Christianity, as
well as Constantine, for the latter had become identified with his faith—and vice versa! Licinius introduced new laws in the
East, banning church synods, severely restricting the circumstances in which Christian worship could be conducted, prohibiting the
instruction of young girls in the Christian faith, and barring “Christians from imperial service.” Officers in his army were required to
“sacrifice to the gods” and those who refused were either dismissed or, in at least 40 well-known cases, put to death.11
Constantine decisively defeated Licinius at the Battle of Chrysopolis (324), in which he and his troops fought under the emblem of
the cross, against a foe who claimed the aid of the traditional deities. As one historian notes, ‘“The defeat of the pagan emperor
must have appeared to be proof of the impotence of his gods.”12 Yet this did not change Constantine’s opinion on persecution.
He no longer had to share power with anyone, anywhere in the Roman Empire—a situation he himself believed was due to the
favor of the Christian God; yet he did not suddenly prohibit pagan worship. Instead, he proclaimed that the right to practice one’s
faith quietly and in peace ought to be “enjoyed by those who err as much as by believers.” He provided that “those who withdraw
themselves may keep the temple of their error,” for they would face sufficient punishment from God and thus need not be
chastened in this world. Indeed, Constantine averred, allowing them to live in peace was the best way to “bring them to the true
faith.”13
This proclamation is pejorative about pagan religion: there was nothing worthy in it, according to Constantine—the ancient shrines
of traditional religion were not the foundation of Roman virtue and power, but rather were “temples of error.” Constantine also
seems to anticipate, or even expect, that pagans will convert; as one scholar puts it, while he permitted paganism to exist
alongside Christianity, he “did not think of this coexistence of two different religions as something to last indefinitely.”14
The emperor thus enacted religious toleration, rather than religious pluralism, for one religion took precedence, culturally and
officially, over others, and there was an assumption that religious diversity would eventually become uniformity. As we shall see in
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subsequent articles, this was a pattern that was to be repeated: historically it has regularly been easier for Christians to accept
religious toleration than pluralism or religious liberty. Crucially, though, under Constantine there was no provision for forced
conversion. Indeed, the imperial proclamation could not have been clearer: “No one should molest another” on religious grounds.
Instead: “Each should live according to his own persuasion.”15
Constantine’s rejection of coercion was most marked in his attitude toward religious diversity in the army. Victory and defeat could
be supernaturally awarded as well as humanly achieved and so the very “security of the state” depended, pagans and Christians
generally agreed, on soldiery and deity being in accord. Frequent sacrifices to the gods were an integral part of Roman military life,
because generals and soldiers alike believed that they could procure celestial blessing in battle—hence Licinius’s demands
during his war against Constantine that his officers sacrifice. Many of the early Christian martyrs were soldiers, for even their
presence in the ranks could not be tolerated by imperial officers, “because it imperiled the sacrifices” that brought victory. A century
later a Christian emperor, Theodosius II, took the logical step (from the Christian point of view) of banning pagans and heretics
from the imperial army, lest their presence offend God and prevent divine intervention.16
Constantine, who attributed his own rise to the imperium to divine intervention, must have felt very keenly the temptation to oblige
all his soldiers to take part in the Christian worship services that, by his decree, had replaced the system of sacrifices, and were
mandatory each Sunday. However, he allowed pagan soldiers to continue in their profession and instead merely encouraged them
to use the time “when the Christian soldiers were occupied with their services” to pray and worship in their own way.17
With insight infrequently matched in subsequent centuries of Christian history the first Christian emperor declared: “No one should
injure another in the name of a faith he himself has accepted from conviction.” He encouraged those of his subjects who were
already believers to teach and preach, in the hope of effecting conversion: “He who is quickest to understand the truth, let him try as
he may to convince his neighbor. But if this is not possible, he must desist.”18 Constantine’s victory message, written to the former
subjects of the defeated Licinius, which pagans might have expected to announce repression, instead concluded: “The battle for
deathlessness requires willing recruits. Coercion is of no avail.”19
An illustration from a northern Italian compendium of canon law depicts Constantine I, the Council of Nicaea, and the
condemnation and burning of Arian books.
Future generations of believers have rarely matched the first Christian emperor’s insight that the Gospels present salvation and
eternal life (“deathlessness”) only as the product of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ that is itself the fruit of deep inward
conviction and what we call conversion. Conversion is not the same thing as conformity.
Constantine: An Overview
here is no doubt that Constantine’s own conversion, and the institutionalization of Christianity in the halls of imperial power,
induced many people to convert—particularly those seeking careers in the civil and military bureaucracies. But the first
Christian emperor did not compel anyone to convert, or to change the nature of their Christian belief. Instead, there are many
examples of prominent civil and military officials who either maintained pagan faith, or whose Christianity was heretical (i.e., not
that approved by the emperor), right until the end of the fourth century.20 Rather than deserving the obloquy that has so often been
heaped upon his head, Constantine deserves praise for his clear-sighted and exemplary attitude toward two of the Christian’s
cardinal duties—to witness vigorously and enthusiastically, but never to cross the line into pressure or compulsion.
Theodosius and the Persecutory Impulse
onstantine’s policies were continued by his successors for some 50 years after his death. The first emperor to use the power of
the state to constrain people’s consciences was Theodosius I (c. 379-395).
Like Constantine, Theodosius desired that his subjects embrace his religion; unlike Constantine, he was willing to use force in
pursuit of his desire of religious uniformity. In 380 he decreed “that all the peoples” under his rule “shall practice that religion which
the divine Peter the Apostle transmitted to the Romans” and that those who do “shall embrace the name of Catholic Christians.”
But all those who followed “heretical dogmas” would “be smitten” by the emperor’s “retribution . . . in accordance with the divine
judgment.”21 Initially, Theodosius persecuted heretics but allowed pagan worship to continue. Later, however, he imposed severe
sanctions against any form of pagan worship whatsoever.22 Even historians sympathetic to Theodosius and the devout Catholic
faith that inspired him observe: “It is possible, but difficult, to find greater examples of intolerance and fanaticism than in the spirit”
that prompted his laws and persecution.23
However, the emperor’s use of threatened and real violence to force heretics to abandon their heterodox beliefs and embrace
orthodoxy, and compel pagans to convert to Christianity, went in step with
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Archbishop Ambrosius prevents Emperor
Theodosius I from entering the Cathedral of Milan
and orders him to do penance for the murder of the
populace of Thessalonica.
similar use of violence by ordinary Christians. Beginning in Antioch in
387, then in Alexandria in 391, large mobs of ordinary believers, with
the blessing of their bishops, sacked and desecrated pagan places of
worship and the homes of those who opposed them, beating those who
resisted them. Other Christians copied them and similar outbreaks quickly
spread to cities across Egypt and then to cities in Gaul.24 It was these
activities that prompted Theodosius to his persecution of pagans. He was
himself personally devout, more so than “any previous [Christian] emperor”;
when he imposed state persecution he did so because both ordinary
Christians and their spiritual leaders “expected the emperor to use the full
weight of the law” against those who were not true believers.25
This is a sobering note on which to conclude, because it shows that Roger
Williams misunderstood the nature of early persecution. The impulse to
persecute is not alien to Christianity and was not imposed on it from without.
Instead, it goes back very early in the history of Christianity. It was an impulse
felt—and acted on—at all levels, including ordinary believers, rather than
being imposed on the church from above by secular-minded emperors. It is
important to recognize the actual chronological progression and that the first
emperor to legalize persecution by Christians was not Constantine but
Theodosius. That emperor’s actions reflected a wider consensus among
Christians: that diversity should be done away with, and uniformity imposed,
by force.
Nevertheless, if we cannot blame politicians for creating the Christian persecutory society, neither can we charge Christianity with
being a natural incubator of persecution. The church of the first, second, and third centuries had steadfastly rejected any use of
force in its relations with pagans or officials. Moreover, just as much as Theodosius, Constantine, too, reflected the church of his
day. For him, certainty of Christianity’s truth was married to belief that truth could only be spread by persuasion, not persecution—
that conversion could never involve compulsion.
However, it is essential to recognize that, for over a thousand years, Christians have often been eager persecutors. Certainty of
truth and absolute love for God can lead believers into contempt for those who think differently. This tendency will become
especially apparent in the next article in this series, when we look at the medieval paradigm of persecution. But it is important to
acknowledge that there has been a persecutory impulse in Christianity since at least the late fourth century, for it is only if we are
aware of intolerant tendencies that we can resist them.
This is Part One in a series. Click here for Part Two, "The Medieval Not Quite Reformed."
David J. B. Trim is a historian, having held professorships in England, as well as membership in the Cromwell Society. He is now
an archivist in Silver Spring, Maryland.
1 Williams quoted in Perez Zagorin, How the Idea of Religious Toleration Came to the West (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univ ersity Press, 2003), p. 203; see Edwin S.Gaustad, Roger Williams (Oxf ord & New York: Oxf ord Univ ersity Press, 2005), pp. 98-100 at 99.2 E.g., see Zagorin, op. cit.; James Carroll, Constantine’s Sword: The Church and the Jews: A History (New York: Houghton Mif f lin, 2001); Harv ey Cox, The Future ofFaith (New York: HarperOne, 2009).3 Cox, p. 5; Alister McGrath, Heresy: A History of Defending the Truth (New York: HarperOne, 2009), p. 204.4 Hans A. Pohlsander, “Constantine I (306–337 A.D.),” in De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors (1999, rev . 2009): www.roman-emperors.org/conniei.htm [accessed Aug. 24, 2010].5 Lactantius, De mortibus persecutorum, chap. 48, in J. P. Migne (ed.), Patrologiae cursus completus, ser. I, Patrologia latina, Vols. VI–VII, Lucii Caecillii Firmiani LactantiiOpera Omnia, 2 v ols. (Paris: Sirou & Vray et, 1844), v ol. ii, cols. 268-269 (all translations are mine). A f ull English translation of the imperial declaration (sometimes calledthe “Edict of Milan”) is in the online Internet Medieval Sourcebook: www.f ordham.edu/halsall/source/edict-milan.html [accessed Aug. 20, 2010].6 Lactantius, De mortibus persecutorum, chap. 48, in Opera Omnia, v ol. ii, col. 268 (my italics).7 H. A. Drake, “The Impact of Constantine on Christianity ,” in Noel Lenski, ed., The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Constantine (Cambridge & New York: CambridgeUniv ersity Press, 2006), p. 117.8 Lactantius, ed. cit., cols. 267, 268. 9 Lactantius, col. 268.10 Ibid. (my italics).11 Noel Lenski, “The Reign of Constantine,” in his Cambridge Companion to the Age of Constantine, p. 75; Michael DiMaio, Jr., “Licinius (308-324 A.D.),” in DeImperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors (1996, rev . 1997): www.roman-emperors.org/licinius.htm [accessed Aug. 17, 2010]. Cf . E. G. Ry an,“Forty Marty rs,” in New Catholic Encylopedia (1967), v ol. 5, pp. 1036, 1037.12 Hermann Doerries, Constantine and Religious Liberty, Roland H. Bainton, trans. (New Hav en, Conn.: Yale Univ ersity Press, 1960), p. 25.13 Quoted in English translation in Doerries, pp. 25, 26.14 Doerries, p. 28.15 Quoted in English translation in Doerries, p. 26.
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16 Doerries, p. 38.17 Ibid.18 Quoted in English translation in Stephen Williams and Gerard Friell, Theodosius: The Empire at Bay (New Hav en & London: Yale Univ ersity Press, 1995), p. 56.19 Quoted in English translation in Doerries, p. 26.20 See Williams and Friell, pp. 47-51.21 Theodosian Code, XVI.I.2, in Edward Peters, ed., Heresy and Authority in Medieval Europe: Documents in Translation (Philadelphia: Univ ersity of Pennsy lv ania Press,1980), pp. 44, 45.22 See Williams and Friell, pp. 52-60, 119-124.23 Williams and Friell, p. 120.24 Ibid., pp. 44,45, 122, 123.25 Ibid., p. 56.
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Free Will,Predestination, AndReligious Liberty
BY: KEV IN D. PAULSON
istening to leaders of the Religious Right in the
United States, one might well conclude that
Christian dominance of civil government is a biblical
command. But a careful review of both Scripture and
church history soon reveals that, like a number of beliefs
and practices in conservative Christian circles, this one entered Christian theology some time after the Bible was written.
When a disciple sought to defend Him by the sword, Jesus commanded, “Put up again thy sword into his place: for all they that
take the sword shall perish with the sword” (Matthew 26:52). The following morning, when questioned by the Roman governor,
Jesus likewise stated, “My kingdom is not of this world: if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight, that I should
not be delivered to the Jews: but now is my kingdom not from hence” (John 18:36).
Christians held faithfully to these principles so long as the Bible doctrine of free will and personal responsibility for salvation was
maintained (see Joshua 24:15; Ezekiel 18:20; Revelation 22:17). But when, in succeeding centuries, a new concept of sin,
responsibility, and salvation entered Christian theological thinking, the seed was sown for the future Christian embrace of
theocratic intolerance.
Original Sin and the Use of Force
aint Augustine of Hippo (A.D. 354-430) is usually credited by historians and theologians as the architect of the doctrine called
original sin—the theory that, because of Adam’s sin, every human being is a condemned sinner at birth. Before Augustine,
Christians generally believed that while physical corruption was inherited by all human beings from Adam, guilt was acquired only
by the individual’s choice to sin.1
Augustine’s doctrine, by contrast, maintained that guilt as well as weakness was every person’s birthright.
Such a concept soon led to the belief that if babies died before baptism, without the chance to have original sin cleansed from their
souls, they would go to hell.2 It also established the premise that because of man’s incurable depravity, force could rightly be used
against heretics and sinners. Augustine, in his treatise titled The City of God, more clearly articulated this principle. In the words of
historian Will Durant: “The Church would later accept this identification [of itself with the “City of God”] as an ideological weapon of
politics, and would logically deduce from Augustine’s philosophy the doctrine of a theocratic state, in which the secular powers,
derived from men, would be subordinate to the spiritual power held by the Church and derived from God.”3
Despite their rejection of many Catholic teachings, the magisterial Protestant Reformers, especially John Calvin, adhered strongly
to Augustine’s view of human nature.4 Thus Calvin, like Augustine and medieval Catholicism, believed in the church’s dominance
of civil government and the use of force against dissenters. Calvin’s consent to the burning of Michael Servetus in Geneva, an act
praised by Catholics as well as Protestants, offers evidence in this regard.5
Predestination
or both Calvin and Augustine, the doctrine of involuntary sin made necessary a doctrine of involuntary salvation. Thus the
theory of predestination was born. Certain ones would be predestined to be saved, while the others are predestined to be
damned. Such a concept removes salvation entirely from the practical experience of humanity, since that experience is presumably
—and inevitably, even for the converted Christian—tainted by original sin. In Calvin’s words: “Until we slough off this mortal body,
there remains always in us much imperfection and infirmity, so that we always remain poor and wretched sinners in the presence
of God. And, however much we ought day by day to increase and grow in God’s righteousness, there will never be plentitude or
perfection while we live here.”6
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The salvation of men and women is therefore not, according to this theology, a freedom from sin accomplished in this present life,
but only a promise of such freedom and eternal bliss in the life to come.
Not all Protestants, of course, accepted the theology of Augustine and the magisterial Reformers. Those of the Arminian-Anabaptist
tradition took a very different view of sin, guilt, and the use of force. Rejecting original sin, these groups insisted on adult baptism,
and from them arose in time the Wesleyan movement in England, with its stress on victory over sin in this present life.
Commenting on this branch of Protestantism, the historian Will Durant writes: “There is no clear filiation between the Continental
Anabaptists and the English Quakers and the American Baptists; but the Quaker rejection of war and oaths, and the Baptist
insistence on adult baptism probably stem from the same traditions of creed and conduct that in Switzerland, Germany, and
Holland took Anabaptist forms. One quality nearly all these groups had in common—their willingness to bear peaceably with faiths
other than their own.”7
The American Experience
onflict between these two strains of Protestantism was inevitable, in the New World as in the Old. The English Puritans, being
followers of Calvin,8 upheld the enforcement of church decrees by the state. Building on the original sin doctrine, the Puritans
refused to grant liberty to the human will, believing it “naturally corrupt.” Speaking of the New England Puritans and their intolerance
of dissent, one historian observes: “They contended that there were two types of liberty—natural (or corrupted) liberty and the ‘liberty
wherewith Christ hath made us free.’ Liberty to practice error came under the former heading and was not really liberty at all, but
license, the ‘liberty for men to destroy themselves.’”9
Little wonder that Roger Williams, of the Anabaptist tradition, was led to challenge this theocratic mind-set, which resulted in his
banishment from Massachusetts. Williams would later observe that he would “rather live with “Christian savages” than “savage
Christians.”10
As American history progressed, the ideas and methods employed by the Calvinist and Arminian branches of Protestantism grew
more distinct one from the other. One recent historian, writing of abolitionist John Brown and the larger antislavery movement,
draws this contrast between those influenced by the Second Great Awakening, largely an Arminian movement with its focus on
human perfectability, and those (like Brown) from the Calvinist tradition:
“Drawing on the Christian humanitarianism and perfectionism unleashed by the revivalist Second Great Awakening, [William Lloyd]
Garrison and the immediatists also renounced violence and stressed the efficacy of moral suasion, in the belief that saving the
nation’s soul required transcending all forms of ungodly coercion.
“John Brown was never committed to moral suasion, nonviolence, or redemptive Christian humanitarianism. Born in Torrington,
Connecticut, in 1800, and raised chiefly in Ohio, he was trained by his devout parents in the old Congregational Calvinism, with its
adherence to predestination.”11
Free Will, Predestination, and Religious Liberty
oday’s Religious Right has followed faithfully in the footsteps of Calvinistic, Augustinian Christianity. In the statement “The
Gospel of Jesus Christ: An Evangelical Celebration12—signed by most conservative Christian leaders in America at that time,
including Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson13—man’s universal condemnation “by nature” is affirmed,14 along with man’s salvation
presumably being accomplished by divine decrees apart from a transformed life.15 Philip Yancey, one of the most popular
evangelical authors today and a frequent critic of the Religious Right, nevertheless joins his fellow evangelicals in embracing the
Calvinist view of sin, grace, and salvation. Regarding the achievement of righteousness by Christians here on earth, Yancey
declares: “God’s grace is so great that we do not have to.”16 Elsewhere he writes: “It is our human destiny on earth to be imperfect,
incomplete, weak, and mortal, and only by accepting that destiny can we escape the force of gravity and receive grace.”17 Though
this is hardly the full-fledged predestination taught by Augustine, Calvin, and others, it nevertheless compromises both human
freedom and biblical teaching by making people sinners apart from personal choice (see Ezekiel 18:20; Romans 5:12; James
1:14, 15; 4:17), and likewise denies the clear message of Scripture that through the exercise of the will blended with imparted
divine strength, men and women can in fact rid their lives of sin (see John 8:11; Romans 8:4, 13; 2 Corinthians 7:1; Philippians
4:13; 1 Thessalonians 5:23; 1 Peter 2:21, 22; 4:1; 1 John 1:9; 3:2, 3, 7; Jude 24; Revelation 3:21; 14:5).
What is clear from church history is that one’s belief about free will and its capacity, in cooperation with God, to choose between
righteousness and sin has much to do with how one respects, and allows for, the exercise of the will by others. If men and women
are viewed as incapacitated by sin against their will, unable except by divine edict to achieve salvation, the next logical step is to
disregard and suppress free will in one’s efforts to cleanse society of evil. If, however, one holds that God’s tolerance of evil
throughout history gives evidence of His respect for freedom, and that through the exercise of this freedom one can—through divine
aid—obey God and eschew evil, it is equally logical, in matters of private moral and spiritual judgment, to leave the choice between
good and evil to the individual.
The Bible clearly upholds obedience to God’s moral law as the condition for receiving eternal life (Matthew 19:17; Luke 10:25-28).
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But the same Bible is equally clear that God gave to human beings, in the very beginning, a free choice between righteousness
and sin. It was God Himself, according to the Bible story, who placed in Eden both the tree of life and the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil (Genesis 2:9). And at the very close of Scripture the invitation is offered: “Whosoever will, let him take the water of life
freely” (Revelation 22:17). The record of history is clear that whenever the church divorces free will from sin and salvation, the
ultimate casualty is freedom itself.
A sometime editor and author, Kevin D. Paulson pastors a church in the New York City area.
1 Louis Berkhof , Systematic Theology (Grand Rapids, Mich.: W. B. Eerdmans, 1977), p. 244.2 Dav id Van Biema, “Lif e Af ter Limbo,” Time, Jan. 9, 2006, p. 68.3 Will Durant, The Age of Faith, The Story of Civilization: Part IV (New York: MJF Books, 1939), p. 73.4 John Calv in, Institutes of the Christian Religion, Book III, Chaps. xxi-xxii.5 Will Durant, The Reformation, The Story of Civilization: Part VI (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1957), p. 484.6 John Calv in, The Geneva Confession, quoted in Lewis W. Spitz, ed., The Protestant Reformation, p. 117.7 Durant, The Reformation, pp. 401,402.8 Thomas J. Curry , The First Freedoms: Church and State in America to the Passage of the First Amendment (New York: Oxf ord Univ ersity Press, 1986), p. 1.9 Ibid., p. 6.10 Charles Longacre, Roger Williams: His Lif e, Work, and Ideals (Washington, D.C.: Rev iew and Herald Publishing Assn., 1939), p. 80.11 Sean Wilentz, “Homegrown Terrorist,” The New Republic, Oct. 24, 2005, p. 24.12 “The Gospel of Jesus Christ: An Ev angelical Celebration,” Christianity Today, June 14, 1999, pp. 51-56.13 Ibid., p. 56.14 Ibid., p. 52.15 Ibid., p. 55.16 Philip Yancey , What’s So Amazing About Grace? (Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zonderv an Publishing House, 1997), p. 210. 17 Ibid., p. 273.
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Questions Of Liberty:A Liberty DialogueWith ConstitutionalScholar ErwinChemerinsky
BY: DAV ID PENDLETON
Erwin Chemerinsky (J.D. Harvard Law School, '78) is Founding Dean of the U.C. Irvine School of Law, an author of numerous legal
treatises and more than 100 law review articles, a renowned constitution scholar, and a veteran U.S. court of appeals and U.S.
Supreme Court litigator.
ean Chemerinsky, thank you for graciously agreeing to be interviewed for Liberty magazine on the topic of religious freedom.
Our readers know we share a profound commitment to the Constitution and to the principle of separation of church and state.
Religious freedom has been described as one of our nation’s first freedoms. In fact, the First Amendment reads in part: “Congress
shall make no law respecting an estab lishment of religion, or prohib iting the free exercise thereof.” What significance, if any, can we
ascribe to the early placement of “religion” in our Constitution’s Bill of Rights and its juxtaposition with free speech and freedom of
association?
do not think that their placement in the First Amendment, as opposed to a subsequent amendment, has any significance. I do
think that it is important that religion is grouped with freedom of speech, press, assembly, and petitioning government for
redress of grievances. All of these are ultimately about freedom of conscience. All are about the ability to have freedom to follow
and express this freedom of conscience in various ways.
e nearly did not have a Bill of Rights because at least the early James Madison thought it unnecessary as the national
government was of limited and enumerated powers. Is the lesson that structural safeguards require express substantive
guarantees to protect our liberties?
he Constitution as drafted did not include a Bill of Rights. The framers thought it unnecessary because they saw the structure
of the government—a government of limited powers with checks and balances—sufficient to protect liberties. They feared that
they could not list all rights and that enumerating some would be taken to deny the existence of others. But several states insisted
on a Bill of Rights. It is difficult to imagine the United States Constitution without an assurance of due process, or protection from
unreasonable searches and seizures, or safeguards for speech and religion.
he core protection for religious liberty is found in the free exercise clause and estab lishment clause. Particularly memorable
has been Thomas Jefferson’s phrase regarding a “wall of separation of church and state.”What should an American know
about these two clauses and this phrase of Jefferson’s that first appeared in private correspondence but was later cited by the
Supreme Court?
he free exercise and establishment clauses are largely complementary. If the government establishes a religion, there is
inevitable coercion to participate. If there is no free exercise of religion, it is the state establishing an orthodoxy of faith.
I think that Thomas Jefferson got it exactly right. There should be a wall separating church and state: high and impregnable. This
means that the government should be secular; the place for religion is in the nongovernment realm, in our homes and places of
worship and daily lives. The free exercise clause then protects the ability to practice (or not practice) religion as one chooses.
n 1940 the Supreme Court said in Cantwell v. Connecticut that the freedom to believe is absolute. More recently Justice Scalia
has written that a ban against casting of statues that are to be used for worship purposes, or to forb id the bowing down to a
golden calf, would be unconstitutional. Yet in his Smith decision he precluded certain Native Americans from practicing a key
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Erw in Chemerinsky speaking at the William & Mary
School of Law in September 2007.
religious belief. If religious liberty must allow some freedom to act–because merely permitting entertaining a belief in the privacy of
one’s mind is a rather inadequate freedom – what are the limits to religious faith and practice?
rior to Employment Division v. Smith (1990), the government could burden religion only if its actions were necessary to
achieve a compelling government interest. Freedom of religion, of course, was not absolute. People could not inflict harm to
others based on religion. But the government would need a compelling reason and no less restrictive alternative to significantly
burden religion.
Employment Division v. Smith changed this. Now the free exercise clause cannot be used to challenge a neutral law of general
applicability no matter how much it burdens religion. The law will be upheld so long as it was not motivated by a desire to interfere
with religion and so long as it applied to everyone. This makes it far more difficult to successfully challenge laws as violating the
free exercise clause.
or those of us who are not constitutional scholars, sometimes it is
challenging to discern how a law might apply to faith. Looking back over
the past years, we see that the Amish, for example, prevailed when it comes
to seeking an exemption for their kids not to have to attend school beyond a
certain age, but the Amish lost when it came to exemptions from Social
Security. A Seventh-day Adventist woman whose faith precluded her from
working on her Saturday Sabbath was entitled to unemployment benefits
when fired, but the Court struck down Connecticut’s law prohib iting
employers from firing workers who refused to work on their Sabbath. An
Orthodox Jewish U.S. Air Force officer lost when he sought an exemption to
allow him to wear a yarmulke when in uniform. Lumber-hauling trucks are
permitted to drive across land sacred to Native Americans. What are the
unifying principles that make sense of this?
nevitably, in dealing with free exercise of religion, and other constitutional
rights, there has to be a balancing test. How that balancing is done very
much depends on the justices. The Court, for example, thought that there
was a sufficient government interest to justify requiring Amish individuals to have Social Security numbers, but not to mandate that
Amish 15- and 16-year-olds attend school.
This is not unique to free exercise. Constitutional law frequently involves these kinds of balances to be struck by the justices.
ow, the First Amendment is not the only constitutional provision dealing with religion. Article VI, section 2 expressly prohib its
the government from inquiring into a person’s religious beliefs as a condition of federal office. How would you answer those
who worry that allowing clergy in elective office risks entanglement of church and state?
ut to exclude clergy from elective office is impermissible hostility to religion. The protection against impermissible
entanglement is a robust establishment clause.
hen the estab lishment and free exercise clauses were ratified they applied only to the federal/national government, and in
fact there were state-estab lished churches at the time. Subsequently these clauses were applied to the states through the
Fourteenth Amendment per the Incorporation Doctrine, a manifestation of the “living constitution.” Some fear this gives too much
power to the courts. Are such fears justified?
o, such fears are not justified. When the Bill of Rights was adopted these rights were deemed to apply only to the federal
government. It was only after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868 and really only in the twentieth century that
the Bill of Rights was applied to the states. But few today question the decisions applying the Bill of Rights to the states. Indeed, it
is hard to fathom a Constitution where freedom of speech and free exercise of religion and the prohibition of unreasonable
searches and seizures did not apply to state and local governments. This is a powerful reason that a living constitution is
essential.
egarding intelligent design in public school curricula and placement on government property of crèches, menorahs, and the
Ten Commandments, some say that the Supreme Court in deciding these cases has forgotten or weakened the free exercise
clause. Others say the estab lishment clause required the outcome. Are the clauses in tension? Is one clause primary and the other
secondary?
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he free exercise clause does not require government endorsement of religion in the form of teaching of religious theories of
the origin of human life or religious symbols on government property. These limits on government support for religion in no
way limit or interfere with the ability of people to practice religion in their homes and places of worship however they choose.
ou have been known to describe the recent Supreme Court as the Kennedy Court. What do you mean by this—and what does
it mean for the future of the free exercise clause and estab lishment clause?
think that there now are five justices—Roberts, Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito—who want to dramatically change the law of
the establishment clause. They want to allow much more government support for religion and much more religious involvement
with government. Their view is that the government violates the establishment clause only if it literally creates a church or coerces
religious participation. This will be a radical change in the law and we are likely to see it soon.
Interviewer David A. Pendleton (J.D., USC Law School, '93), a former state legislator and former former constitutional law student
of Dean Chemerinsky, adjudicates workers' compensation appeals in Honolulu, Hawaii.
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J AN U AR Y / F E B R U AR Y 2 0 1 1
The Black-RobedRegiment
BY: GREGORY W. HAM ILTON
lenn Beck made quite an impact with his
Washington rally this year. It led many to comment
that he seemed to be positioning himself as a leader of
the conservative Christian political spectrum. It has been
noted that Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin, Newt Gingrich, and
David Barton all champion the "Black-Robed Regiment."
David Barton, of course, is America's most public
historical and constitutional revisionist, and a much-quoted authority for a Christian American republic that many conservatives say
once existed.
Who were the so-called "Black-Robed Regiment," and what was their message? They were preachers of the American
Revolutionary period. But they were spiritual leaders who had largely strayed from the reform principles of the First Great
Awakening.
A goodly number of the preachers who participated and led during that First Great Awakening were influenced by the Scottish,
English, and French Enlightenments. They opposed some of their colleagues' fundamentalist approach to Christianity and a brash
and brazen involvement in political matters. Some of these Great Awakening preachers—Baptist, Presbyterian, Quaker, and
Episcopalian—had some considerable influence on the thinking of many of the constitutional founders, who were "enlightened"
thinkers as well. They, along with the founders, wanted to dismantle church establishments and see an increased separation
between church and state therefore realized. They wanted a decided move away from the Puritan experiment.
The Black-Robed Preachers, on the other hand, were, for the most part, not supportive of this new wave of so-called
"Enlightenment" thinking and wanted a return to Puritan values and the preservation and strengthening of religious and church
establishments through state legislative means, including the continued taxation of the public for their support.
The ensuing religio-political clash was inevitable. That great leader of the Awakening, Jonathan Edwards opposed Jonathan
Mayhew's radical political sermons that stirred up revolt against Britain. Edwards rebuked him, telling him to preach Christ.
During the prerevolutionary, revolutionary, and constitutional founding periods, Samuel Davies, a Presbyterian stalwart, and a
number of persecuted Baptist luminaries, such as Isaac Backus and John Leland, were among many others who sought to right
the ship of church and state by promoting true religious liberty, as opposed to mere "tolerance."
The Black-Robed Preachers were indeed successful in helping to stir up the spirit of "Revolution" among the Colonists. However, it
is also fortunate that in their decided stand against the Constitution they lost the intellectual and political domestic struggle that
mattered most in terms of being able to claim a credible legacy in our collective memories regarding America's founding. They
have simply been forgotten and for a good reason.
But Glenn Beck and David Barton would have us believe that these revolutionary preachers need to have revived importance in their
struggle to rewrite our country's history, and the Constitution itself, in the minds and hearts of the American people.
Few realize today that these so-called black-robed radicals fought ratification of the Constitution in every state and thus were one
reason, among many other factors, that Jay, Hamilton, and Madison wrote the Federalist Papers—to make sure it was ratified.
They were also largely in league with Patrick Henry, who opposed the Constitution. And finally, and most important, they were the
ones who opposed the Constitution because "God" was left out and it contained no mention of our country being a Christian nation.
With Jasper Adams and Timothy Dwight, they continued on into the early national period (1800-1840) by calling for a rewritten
Constitution to reflect a legal Christian status and one that favored Christian institutions through federal and state funding
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schemes. This was similar to what Patrick Henry sought when fighting against Jefferson's and Madison's Virginia Statute for
Religious Freedom. James Madison even wrote a letter in response to Jasper Adams' invitation to support his nationwide
campaign, stating: "Experience will be an admitted umpire. . . . In the papal system, government and religion are in a manner
consolidated, and that is found to be the worst of governments."
We need to continually remember that the same unthinking and unwise forces seen during the time of America's founding and
early national periods are alive and well today.
Gregory W. Hamilton is president of the Northwest Religious Liberty Association, Ridgefield, Washington.
4/18/13 Liberty Magazine | Europe and the Issue of Rest
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J AN U AR Y / F E B R U AR Y 2 0 1 1
Europe And TheIssue Of Rest: ADocumentInvokes OldChurch-StateIssue
BY: EDWIN COOK
n May 31, 1998, Pope John Paul II issued the apostolic letter Dies Domini (on keeping the Lord's Day holy), in which he
attempted to provide a biblical argument for Sunday worship. While both the argumentation used and the appeal to Scripture
are questionable, the practical application of the letter is not. In article 67, paragraph 2, Pope John Paul II admonished: "Therefore,
also in the particular circumstances of our own time, Christians will naturally strive to ensure that civil legislation respects their duty
to keep Sunday holy. In any case, they are obliged in conscience to arrange their Sunday rest in a way which allows them to take
part in the Eucharist, refraining from work and activities which are incompatible with the sanctification of the Lord's Day, with its
characteristic joy and necessary rest for spirit and body" (italics supplied).
Sunday Laws in Europe
Since release of Dies Domini, bishops and priests alike have obediently heeded the admonitions contained therein. In Croatia, a
country comprised of a predominant Catholic populace (90 percent), efforts to pass a national Sunday law found fruition on January
1, 2009, after the cabinet had spent four years preparing the legislation.1 The law, making exceptions for bakeries, flower shops,
newsstands, and stores located in bus, train, and metro stations, requires all businesses to remain closed on Sundays .2 Despite
the lack of support from the populace, the highly influential leadership of the church pressured Parliament to pass the law, without
consideration of the effects upon minority religious groups who hold as sacred a day other than Sunday.
During the same year, debate on Sunday legislation escalated in Germany. Berlin had passed legislation allowing stores to be
open for ten Sundays a year, per contra the national law. Catholic and Lutheran churches had opposed Berlin's law and the case
made its way to Germany's Constitutional Court, which ruled against Berlin's law of leniency.3 The court's ruling went into effect on
January 1, 2010. Germany's protection for Sundays is found in article 140 of Germany's Basic Law, a holdover from the Weimar
Constitution of 1919.
While these steps were being taken in Croatia and Germany, the Commission of Bishops for the European Community (COMECE)
had given hearty approval and support to the proposal brought by five ministers of state to the European Parliament, arguing in
favor of a Sunday law for all of Europe since Sunday served as a proper "cultural patrimony and social model" for European
society.4 They argued for recognition of Sunday as a day of rest for the well-being of society. They reasoned that, in light of the
current economic crisis, economies continued to function, indicating that the common seven-day workweek is not as essential as
believed. They concluded that amid the hectic demands of modern, fast-paced society, families needed time together. Adeptly
sidestepping any religious connotations to their appeal, they focused their arguments on the detriment to society's moral tone due
to parents who had no time for their children, or for their own health.
Other supporters have included pro-labor and pro-family organizations from numerous European countries such as Germany,
Austria, Denmark, Croatia, Spain, France, and Italy. Most recently, debate on the topic was aired on the British Broadcasting
Corporation's program The Big Questions,5 which pitted Dr. Michael Schluter, director of the organization Keep Sunday Special, Alex
Goldberg, head of the London Jewish Forum, Jenni Trent Hughes, work-life relations expert, and Cristina Odone, writer and
broadcaster, against Richard Haddock, farmer and entrepreneur, and other U.K. citizens who are against Sunday legislation.
All of these Sunday legislation developments in Croatia, Germany, and possibly for all of Europe, due to the European Union's
legislative decision, the central issue, beg the big question of motivation. What is the motivation behind calls for Sunday rest? Is it
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S
T
solely to rest from labor, thus allowing time for families? Or, does it have another facet related to religious overtures? Sunday-rest
advocates answer affirmatively the former question, and negatively the latter. The Commission of Bishops for the European
Community recognizes that Europe is comprised of a variety of religious groups that do not all share the sanctity for Sunday as the
Catholic Church does.6 Respecting those differences, the bishops concede that any day could be set aside as a day of rest from
labor, but the customary practice in European society is that public institutions and schools are closed on Sundays. Thus, to
facilitate family time, a work-free Sunday law should be enacted for all of Europe that contains not a hint of religious terminology or
connotations.
As fair-minded as this argument sounds, however, its central weakness is that it does not answer the question Upon what
foundation—religious, or merely social—does the customary practice exist of closing public institutions and schools on Sundays?
When presented in this light, one avoids defending a practice just because it may have the advantage of ages of existence.
Therefore, the issue demands further investigation, especially in light of the historic argument. As the eminent historian A. H.
Lewis, D.D., stated: "History is an organic whole, a series of reciprocal causes and effects. No period can be separated from that
which has gone before, nor be kept distinct from that which follows. . . . Every effort to remodel existing Sunday legislation, or to
forecast its future, must be made in the light of the past."7 Thus, it is necessary to examine both the theological and the historic
rationales surrounding the current Sabbath debate.
Saturday Worship and Sabbatarians
abbatarians are believers who observe Saturday as the biblical Sabbath. They find in Scripture support for this practice as
opposed to Sunday as the day of worship. Because the biblical Sabbath is typically associated with Judaism, Sabbatarians
are often mistakenly identified as Jewish believers, or "Judaizers." However, Sabbatarians understand the perpetuity of God's Ten
Commandment law,8 and recognize the fourth commandment at the heart of it. They believe that the Sabbath is a memorial both of
Creation and of redemption.
God created the world in six literal days and rested on the seventh, thus completing His work of Creation.9 Jesus Christ taught that
the Sabbath was for humankind, bypassing any reference to the Jewish nature of the Sabbath, when He referred to the Creation
week: "The Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the Sabbath. Therefore the Son of Man is also Lord of the Sabbath."10 The
apostle Paul, many decades after Christ's crucifixion, continued this Creation-theme emphasis when he referred to the Sabbath of
Creation and its enduring blessings to all who observe it: "For he spake in a certain place of the seventh day on this wise, And God
did rest the seventh day from all his works. . . . There remaineth therefore a rest [Greek, sabbaton] to the people of God."11
Sabbatarians also believe the Sabbath serves as a memorial of redemption. During the Passion Week, Jesus was crucified on
Friday, rested in the tomb on Sabbath, and was resurrected on the first day of the week, Sunday.12 On the Friday of His crucifixion,
Christ declared, "It is finished!" as He breathed His last breath, indicating that His supreme sacrifice for humankind was a
completed act.13 During the Sabbath, Christ rested from His completed work of salvation; symbolic of the spiritual "rest" into which
His followers enter by observing the Sabbath.14 Thus, those who observe the Sabbath as a sign of their salvation in Jesus Christ
cannot be accused of trying to "work their way to heaven" out of good merit, since they have "ceased from [their] own works, as God
did from his" and trust fully upon the merits of a crucified and risen Savior.15 Although Sunday was the day of Christ's resurrection,
there are no scriptural passages supporting the observance of it as a day of worship.16
In contrast to Sabbatarians, numerous Christians worship on Sunday. Lacking strong biblical support, Christians who observe
Sunday as their sabbath have historically relied upon the tradition of the church and their desire to dissociate themselves from any
Jewish overtones that they believe are central to Sabbath (Saturday) observance. The historical record during the Christian Era is
replete with numerous periods of struggle between Sabbatarians and Sunday-observing Christians, which repeatedly resulted in
legislatively enacted Sunday laws.
Sunday Laws and the Roman Catholic Church
he history of Sunday legislation clearly indicates that it is integrally related to religious beliefs. History records that Sunday
legislation traces as far back as the Roman emperor Constantine, who on March 7, 321, enacted into law a decree to honor
the "venerable day of the sun," by which citizens were to abstain from work on Sunday, a day dedicated to the worship of the sun
god and to the observance of "its venerable rites."17 As one Catholic historian transparently acknowledged regarding Constantine's
efforts on behalf of the church: "He invested the judicial decisions of the bishop with civil authority. He modified the Roman Law in
the direction of Christian values. Sunday, the day when Christians assembled, was made a day of rest. . . . Under Constantine the
Church was firmly set on the road to union with the state."18
Several decades later, in A.D. 364, the Catholic Church convened the Council of Laodicea. One of its decisions related to a practice
dating back to the middle of the second century, to roughly A.D. 150. At that time, the church had begun to encourage Christians to
observe Sunday instead of the biblical Sabbath in order to distinguish Christians from Jewish believers, a change without
scriptural support. By the time of the Council of Laodicea, Christians were observing both days of the week. In order to make a
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The Council of Trent as depicted by the artist
Pasquale Cati in 1588.
complete break with the Sabbath, and substitute it with Sunday, the council stated, in Canon 29: "CHRISTIANS must not judaize by
resting on the Sabbath [Saturday], but must work on that day, rather honoring the Lord's Day [Sunday]; and, if they can, resting then
as Christians. But if any shall be found to be judaizers, let them be anathema from Christ."19 The church's overtly antagonistic
stance toward the biblical Sabbath paved the way for atrocious and grueling torture of "Judaizers" during the Inquisition many
centuries later.
A short 16 years after the Council of Laodicea, the church had gained such influence over the masses that emperors Gratian and
Theodosius finally established it as the basis of the whole social order."This is the intent of the epoch-making decree promulgated
by Theodosius from Thessalonica on February 27, 380, which began: 'We desire that all peoples who fall beneath the sway of our
imperial clemency should profess the faith which we believe has been communicated by the Apostle Peter to the Romans and
maintained in its traditional form to the present day. . . .' Paganism was declared illegal, while privileges were granted to the
Catholic clergy; they were accorded immunity from trial except in ecclesiastical courts. Roman law was revised in harmony with
Christian principles: The Sunday observance laws of Constantine were revived and enlarged, with the banning of public or private
secular activities."20
Not even the passage of time has altered the vehement attitude of the church toward Sabbath-observing Christians. A little more
than a thousand years after the time of emperors Gratian and Theodosius, the church again thundered its opposition against
Sabbathkeeping believers at the Council of Florence (1438-1445).
Catholic theologians failed to see the distinction between the moral Sabbath (Saturday) of God's Ten Commandment law and the
ceremonial sabbaths, which required animal sacrifices that symbolized the long-awaited Messiah. The moral Sabbath of the Ten
Commandments (Saturday) was to be observed on a weekly basis,21 but the ceremonial sabbaths sometimes occurred in the
middle of the week, and sometimes on the Sabbath (Saturday) of the Ten Commandments.22 Ceremonial sabbaths were also
associated with circumcision, animal sacrifices, and the Jewish covenant.
Although the ceremonial sabbaths were fulfilled by the death of Jesus at Calvary,23 the moral Sabbath of the Ten Commandments
(Saturday) remained in vigor as part of God's moral law for humanity,24 just as the apostle Paul stated, "Circumcision is nothing,
and uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of the commandments of God."25 Misunderstanding these fine theological nuances,
Catholic theologians mistakenly conflated ceremonial sabbath observance with moral Sabbath observance. Thus, at the Council of
Florence, they declared that all who observe the Sabbath (Saturday) are "alien to the Christian faith and not in the least fit to
participate in eternal salvation, unless someday they recover from these errors."26
Within a century later, the Protestant Reformation had occurred and the
Catholic Church was already organizing its forces for the Counter-
Reformation. Seeking to counteract Protestant advances, the church at the
Council of Trent ordered the preparation of the Catechism of the Council of
Trent, in which leading theologians formulated responses to the perceived
Protestant heresies.27 One of the doctrines reemphasized was the teaching
regarding the Sabbath (Sunday) commandment.28 Here again, the Catholic
Church acknowledged the (attempted) transference of the sanctity of the
biblical Sabbath from Saturday to Sunday, claiming the church's authority to
tamper with the divine law of God: "But the Church of God has thought it well
to transfer the celebration and observance of the Sabbath to Sunday." Of
utmost concern to the discussion of Sunday-rest laws, the Council of Trent
not only solemnly admonished all to abstain from work on Sunday, but also
continued to expound upon the obligation of all to use the day in "worship of
God, which is the great end of the Commandment." Such worship included
attendance at church, confession to the priest, performance of the Sacrament
of Penance, and participation in the "Holy Sacrifice of the Mass."29
With such mistaken zeal about the moral law of God, the Catholic Church justified itself in the torture and murder of numerous
"Judaizers" during the Inquisition. Historical records confirm that not all who observed the biblical Sabbath (Saturday) were Jewish
in faith, yet they were classified as "Judaizers" because, in the eyes of the church, they maintained an affinity to the Sabbath of the
Ten Commandments.30 Not only was the Catholic Church a persecuting force to Sabbatarians, but also the Reformed faith in
Transylvania persecuted and confiscated property of Sabbathkeepers during the Great Persecution of 1638.31 Thus, history records
that both Catholics and Protestants united in their efforts to suppress other Christians who held convictions about the Sabbath that
were contrary to their own.
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C
It becomes evident that any emphasis upon Sunday-rest does not involve the mere abstinence from work, but naturally leads to the
observance of religious rites. As recently in the modern era as 1864, the church voiced its authority, declaring that the state does
not have the authority to allow servile work on certain holy days and feasts, contrary to the teachings of the church—such men
"make the impious pronouncement . . . that the law should be repealed 'by which on some fixed days, because of the worship of
God, servile works are prohibited [by the church].'"32 In those countries where governments acquiesce to the demands for Sunday-
rest legislation, they will acknowledge by default that the church has the upper hand. This in turn will lead to the church not only
obligating citizens to rest on Sunday, but to worship on it as well.
Some may argue that such accounts refer to Roman Catholicism of the past and that Vatican II (1962-1965) introduced dramatic
reforms within the church. While there is some veracity to such an argument, one must not overlook the immutable position of the
church with respect to Sunday. In Dies Domini, article 3, paragraph 1, Pope John Paul II stated: "The fundamental importance of
Sunday has been recognized through two thousand years of history and was emphatically restated by the Second Vatican Council:
'Every seven days, the Church celebrates the Easter mystery. This is a tradition going back to the Apostles, taking its origin from the
actual day of Christ's Resurrection—a day thus appropriately designated "the Lord's Day."' Paul VI emphasized this importance
once more when he approved the new General Roman Calendar and the Universal Norms which regulate the ordering of the
Liturgical Year." The calendar reform—the idea of making calendars with Sunday as the last day of the week, rather than Saturday
—has found continual support from the church and is gaining headway in Europe.
Not only was the immutable position of the church regarding Sunday worship evident at Vatican II, but Catholic theologians have
written extensively to promote Sunday worship. For example, one of the leading Catholic scholars in the "nouvelle théologie"
movement, Henri de Lubac, refers to the periods of world history, the sixth one having begun with the incarnation of Jesus and the
seventh one beginning with His resurrection. By using numerology, mystical symbolism, and church tradition, De Lubac attempts
to rationalize why Sunday should be considered as a true Sabbath of rest in honor of the Resurrection.33 Calendars should reflect
this teaching, hence, the substitution of God's holy Sabbath (Saturday) with the Sabbath (Sunday) of the church's own creation.
In light of the foregoing efforts of the church to exalt Sunday worship, and especially when one considers the examples of Sunday
laws being passed in Croatia and Germany mentioned at the beginning of this article, there remains an immovable shadow of
doubt upon the position of the church as a champion of religious freedom for those of other faiths.
Conclusions
urrent debate regarding Sunday as a day of rest from labor cannot overlook the direct impact of Dies Domini and the
centuries-long struggle over the Sabbath (Saturday) as a day of worship. The apostolic church, founded by Christ and under
the guidance of the apostles, observed the biblical Sabbath, Saturday. While the Catholic Church does acknowledge this fact, it
also has declared in various councils the authority of the church to command the observance of Sunday, not only as a day of rest,
but also as a day of worship. Not content with mere didactic efforts, the church has also sought on various occasions to enforce its
teachings regarding Sunday observance through legislative enactment.
Through the centuries various Christian groups have rediscovered the truth regarding the biblical Sabbath and have consequently
begun worshipping on Saturday instead of Sunday. If one were to apply the specious reasoning and coercive spirit of the Catholic
Church as recorded in the history of the Sabbath-Sunday debate and briefly outlined in this article, then such groups in our day as
Seventh Day Baptists, Jews who observe the Sabbath, Seventh-day Adventists, members of the Worldwide Church of God
(Seventh-day), the Church of God of Prophecy, and various other Pentecostal Christians would be subject to the anathema,
execration, and condemnation of the Catholic Church (and possibly subject to that of other Sundaykeeping Christians, too). God
forbid, but is it possible that in our enlightened age of civility, religious pluralism, and respect for differing views, we shall see a
return to the barbaric and heinous crimes of religious persecution of medieval times?
Edwin Cook, a minister of religion, is currently completing his doctoral studies in church-state relations at Baylor University,
Waco, Texas.
1Accessed on 5/11/2010 f rom www.topnews.in/croatian-retailers-sack-workers-nev er-sunday -law-kicks-2106643.2 Accessed on 5/11/2010 f rom http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory ?id=5378375.3 Acessed on 5/11/2010 f rom www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,4953600,00.html.4 Accessed on 5/11/2010 f rom www.aciprensa.com/noticia.php?n=24334.5 Aired on March 24, 2010; www.bbc.co.uk/thebigquestions.6 Accessed on 5/11/2010 f rom www.elimparcial.es/contenido/35248.html.7 A. H. Lewis, A Critical History of Sunday Legislation From 321 to 1888 A.D. (New York: D. Appleton and Company , 1888), pp. v , v i.
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8 There are sev eral laws mentioned in Scripture: (1) the Ten Commandment law (Exodus 20:1-17), (2) the "law [of sacrif ices]", (Hebrews 10:1), (3) the "law of sin anddeath" (Romans 8:2), and, (4) the "law of f aith" (Romans 3:27). Recognizing the multiple laws mentioned in Scripture requires close scrutiny to determine which ones wereabolished by Christ's death at Calv ary (the law of sacrif ices and, partially , the law of sin and death, at least with respect to mankind's condemnation) and which oneswere upheld (the Ten Commandment law as identif y ing sin, the law of sin and death as requiring the death of the sinner, in this case, Christ who bore our sins, and the lawof f aith, by which we gain access to God's grace).9 Genesis 2:1-3.10 Mark 2:27, 28, NKJV. Texts credited to NKJV are f rom the New King James Version. Copy right © 1979, 1980, 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. Allrights reserv ed.11 Hebrews 4:4-9.12 Luke 23:54–24:1.13 John 19:30, NKJV; Hebrews 4:5, 9-11.14 Hebrews 4:5, 9-11.15 Hebrews 4:10: "For he that is entered into his rest, he also hath ceased f rom his own works, as God did f rom his."16 There are only eight ref erences in the New Testament that ref er to "the f irst day of the week" and none of them giv e the command to worship on that day as thef ourth commandment orders the observ ance of Saturday : Matthew 28:1; Mark 16:2, 9; Luke 24:1; John 20:1, 19; Acts 20:7; 1 Corinthians 16:1-4.17 Henry Bettenson, ed., Documents of the Christian Church (London: Oxf ord Univ ersity Press, 1963), pp. 18, 19.18 Thomas Bokenkotter, A Concise History of the Catholic Church (New York: Doubleday , 1990), p. 39.19Accessed on 5/9/2010 f rom http://reluctant-messenger.com/council-of -laodicea.htm.20 Bokenkotter, p. 57.21 Exodus 20:8-11; Deuteronomy 5:12-15.22 For example, the observ ance of the Day of Atonement occurred on the tenth day of the sev enth month and was considered as "a sabbath of rest," ev en though it didnot f all on the weekly Sabbath (Saturday ) in some giv en y ears (Lev iticus 23:27-38). Nonetheless, God made a clear distinction between it and the weekly , moral Sabbathwhen He commanded the observ ance of these f easts of atonement (v erse 37) "besides [or, in addition to] the Sabbaths of the Lord" (v erse 38, NKJV).23 Daniel 9:27; Colossians 2:14-17.24 Romans 3:31.25 1 Corinthians 7:19.26 "A Decree in Behalf of the Jacobites," f rom the bull "Cantata Domino," Feb. 4, Florentine sty le, 1441, modern, 1442, as cited in Henry Denzinger, The Sources ofCatholic Dogma (Fitzwilliam, N.H..: Loreto Publications, 2002), p. 229 (par. 712).27 Originally conv ened December 13, 1545, it was not until February 26, 1562, when a commission was actually appointed to prepare the catechism. Pope Saint Pius V,xxiii.28 Pope Saint Pius V, The Catechism of the Council of Trent (Rockf ord, Ill.: Tan Books and Publishers, Inc., 1982), pp. 402-407.29 Ibid., p. 403.30 Haim Beinart, ed., Records of the Trials of the Spanish Inquisition in Ciudad Real (Jerusalem: The Israel Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1985), v ol. 4, pp. 409-525.This section, Biographical Notes, relates personal inf ormation about the 700 citizens of Ciudad Real who were tried, and many of whom were burned at the stake, f orobserv ing the Sabbath (Saturday ).31 Daniel Liechty , Sabbatarianism in the Sixteenth Century: A Page in the History of the Radical Reformation (Berrien Springs, Mich.: Andrews Univ ersity Press, 1993), pp.68-77.32 Pius IX, f rom the ency clical Quanta cura, Dec. 8, 1864, as cited in Denzinger, p. 431 (par. 1693).33 Henri de Lubac, Catholicism: Christ and the Common Destiny of Man (San Francisco, Calif .: Ignatius Press, 1988), pp. 150-155.
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J AN U AR Y / F E B R U AR Y 2 0 1 1
Do Unto OthersBY: ROBERT E. LEE
Is it not strange that the descendents of those Pilgrim Fathers who crossed the Atlantic to
preserve their own freedom of opinion have always proved themselves intolerant of the
spiritual liberty of others?
General Robert E. Lee in a letter to his w ife, December 1856.